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Massive Blog Hackery Exposed

Tony of DJI talks about an unexpected outcome from TailRank’s River, a blog monitoring service. A large number of blogs turned out to have been hacked to promote spammy content and affiliate links.

Hidden content injected in the blog templates with links to each other in order to push the rankings in the SERPs. Blog monitoring services like TailRank, which tracks interlinking content, obviously showed those spammy content.

I’ve seen and have had experience with such types of blog hacking:

  • Modifying “header.php” or “footer.php” and inserting links to spammy sites. These text links are enclosed in DIV tags so they can be positioned way off of the screen.
  • Popular and free themes are modified and inserted with obfuscated PHP scripts to be injected remotely. The themes are then repackaged and re-distributed to the public. These scripts can then be manipulated later to inject spammy content and text links to any targeted sites. Much like a zombie blog.
  • Uploading CGI scripts into the “cgi-bin” directory via unrestricted folders. The CGI scripts can then be accessed and used to run whatever command lines the hacker wants.
  • SQL injections. Older and vulnerable versions of WordPress can be attacked via SQL injections to add content to existing/archived blog posts/entries with links to spammy sites.
  • Modifying .htaccess files to redirect (301) certain popular or high rankings pages to other spammy or affiliate-filled sites.
  • Directly modifying unrestricted pages to insert AdSense codes or modify existing AdSense Publisher ID to that of the hacker.
  • I’ve also seen blogs being sabotaged by creating empty folders that follow the same permalink structure as some of the pages of the blog. This, in effect, overrides the custom permalinks and disables the affected pages.

What’s surprising is that most of the hacks that I encountered were deployed by Filipinos too. Here are some snippets of their codes:

if ($epwd ne $npwd) {
$msg = “<br /><h1>Mukha Mo!</h1>
“;
}

print header( -COOKIE=>$cid ), start_html(”BUTAS”);

Either they coded the hack themselves or got the script somewhere else and modified it to their own liking. It was obvious because some of the coding (commands and variables) used in the script are in Tagalog.

Tony adds some advise on how to prevent this. I’ve written an more general blog post about security and contingency plans here as well.

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33 Responses to “Massive Blog Hackery Exposed”


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  1. Gravatar Icon 1 Jeffrey Apr 7th, 2008 at 4:00 pm

    That’s why i no longer use free themes. But when i do use free ones, i just modify the Wordpress default theme.

  2. Gravatar Icon 2 Dexter Apr 7th, 2008 at 4:36 pm

    I was a victim of this one too.. The answer should be constant back up..

  3. Gravatar Icon 3 Janina Apr 7th, 2008 at 6:03 pm

    I hoff my blog wont be hack by this hackers. I dont how would i peel ip my site is hacks!

    Visit my site fleasee:
    http://www.janinablog.com

  4. Gravatar Icon 4 BrianB Apr 7th, 2008 at 6:54 pm

    Yep this happened to pmptoday around december and for the entire january. A porn site hacked us and we hardly noticed until we saw a dramatc decline in traffic.

  5. Gravatar Icon 5 BrianB Apr 7th, 2008 at 6:56 pm

    Just noticed Janina. Think about this guys. If it was celine lopez he’s spoofing, he would get his ass sued.

  6. Gravatar Icon 6 SELaplana Apr 7th, 2008 at 10:33 pm

    I recently discovered that my footer was modified and inserted a code that insert unknown image. I don’t know if it was done remotely or just automatically inserted by a worm or trojan or whatever when editing it using the CPANEL or theme Edit function of wordpress

  7. Gravatar Icon 7 FruityOaty Apr 8th, 2008 at 12:06 am

    I was recently hacked too (index.php file) and iframes were injected in my posts. It resulted in my site getting banned from Google Search results (distributing spyware). All Google results pertaining to my site were slapped with this warning: “This site may be harmful to your computer.” As a result, traffic from Google trickled to ZILCH. My Adsense dropped too.

    It was hell fixing the issue. After the fix, I had to request that Google re-assess my site. It was given a clean bill of health just a couple of weeks ago.

    I wanted to write about the incident, but I was afraid of attracting the hacker’s attention again.

    Since then, I toughened up my site’s security… well, to the best of my knowledge. (It’s a bit technical for some people, this topic.)

    I really recommend this site: http://blogsecurity.net/

    Got a lot of useful tips & tools (plugins) on how to secure WordPress a bit more.

  8. Gravatar Icon 8 FruityOaty Apr 8th, 2008 at 12:09 am

    Oh, P.S.

    Try this plugin called WP Security Scan:
    http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wp-security-scan/#post-4986

    Scans your WordPress installation for security vulnerabilities and suggests corrective actions.

    -passwords
    -file permissions
    -database security
    -version hiding
    -WordPress admin protection/security

  9. Gravatar Icon 9 Maki Apr 8th, 2008 at 12:52 am

    How do you check if a blog is hacked?

  1. 10 Deep Jive Interests » UPDATE: Has ZDnet Been Hacked As Well? Pingback on Apr 8th, 2008 at 12:21 am

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